Reliability Pricing Model (RPM)
PJM’s Reliability Pricing Model is acquiring more capacity than needed, leading to dirtier, less efficient generation and excessive costs for consumers.
Has FERC made a case that cooperatives, municipal utilities and vertically integrated utilities that self-supply suppress capacity prices?
ODEC and other self-supply load-serving entities in PJM argue FERC's order to expand the MOPR will undermine their roles in local economic development.
In his latest column, Steve Huntoon argues that FERC's ruling on PJM's MOPR will benefit renewables and not result in higher capacity market prices.
Despite running more than 1,000,000 more scenarios, PJM has not found a problem with fuel security, argues columnist Steve Huntoon.
PJM stakeholders gathered for a special Members Committee meeting in Cambridge, Md., as part of the RTO’s Annual Meeting.
Eric Gimon, senior fellow with Energy Innovation Policy & Technology, argues against PJM's extended Resource Carve-Out capacity market proposal.
Public power representatives reiterated their case against mandatory capacity markets, teaming with renewable advocates for a one-day conference.
The PJM Markets and Reliability Committee agreed to a one-year delay in adding cost-containment measures to the RTO’s transmission planning process.
OPSI warned PJM that it should avoid any capacity market changes that would increase costs or restrict state policies setting generation preferences.
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